‘Oh Dutchmen, Defer this Catastrophe’

The Haitian Revolution and the Decline of Abolitionism in the Netherlands, ca. 1790-1840

Author(s)

  • Karwan Fatah-Black Leiden University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51769/bmgn-lchr.12788

Abstract

‘Oh Dutchmen, defer this catastrophe’ wrote a former Dutch plantation owner commenting on the temporary abolition of slavery in the French empire in 1794. It seems that his advice was heeded, as it took close to 70 more years to abolish Dutch slavery. Strangely, however, the successful defence of slavery does not feature prominently in the historiographical debate over the late abolition of Dutch slavery. This article ventures to explore the ideological defence of slavery in the Dutch Republic around the turn of the eighteenth century, and how it was connected to Atlantic debates on race, slavery and civilisation in the wake of the Haitian revolution (1790-1804). By studying historical publications I show that the Dutch interpretation of the Haitian Revolution came about through translated works. These works almost exclusively supported a racial conservative interpretation of Haiti. The revolt even became an important point of reference in Dutch political circles. These findings offer a new perspective on the decline of principled abolitionism in the Netherlands from the late eighteenth century until the 1840s.

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Author Biography

  • Karwan Fatah-Black, Leiden University

    Karwan Fatah-Black is assistant professor at the department of social and economic history at Leiden University and senior researcher at the Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies. He studies the Dutch colonial empire in the Atlantic world and specifically issues pertaining to economic development, slavery, emancipation and citizenship. His current research teams study the transition from slavery to citizenship and are funded by the Royal Academy of Arts and Science fund Staatsman Thorbecke and the Dutch Research Council Vidi grant. Among others he published: ‘What is Manumission? A Manumittee-Centric Model of the Manumission Process in Eighteenth- Century Surinam’, Esclavages & Post-Esclavages 9 (2024) 1-21 with Camilla de Koning and Ramona Negrón; Serving the chain? De Nederlandsche Bank and the last decades of slavery, 1814-1863 (Leiden University Press 2023) with Lauren Lauret and Joris van den Tol; ‘The power of procedure: punishment of slaves and the administration of justice in Suriname, 1669 1869’, Journal of Global Slavery 7 (2022) 19-47 with Imran Canfijn. E-mail: k.j.fatah@hum.leidenuniv.nl.

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Published

2024-09-30

How to Cite

Fatah-Black, K. (2024). ‘Oh Dutchmen, Defer this Catastrophe’: The Haitian Revolution and the Decline of Abolitionism in the Netherlands, ca. 1790-1840. BMGN - Low Countries Historical Review, 139(3), 69-93. https://doi.org/10.51769/bmgn-lchr.12788